DANNY Garcia sees himself joining Jose Reyes to form the most dynamic double-play combination in Met history.

The folks who speak for Chien-Ming Wang see him making postseason Yankee Stadium starts for many Octobers to come.

Once, these 23-year-olds played in New York City, two more big-dreaming rookies in Brooklyn and Staten Island, respectively.

But this summer, as a new crop of Cyclones and Yankees pick up their pro careers in the New York Penn League, Garcia and Wang provide hope that some of those big dreams can turn legitimate.

Take Garcia, who came to the City three years ago, an Anaheim, Calif., second baseman wowed by his first trip to Times Square.

Now, he’s a star in an improving Mets system, which recently has been ranked as high as second-best in baseball. And if his .290 average holds up the rest of the year at Triple-A Norfolk, Garcia will spend next spring playing for a Shea starting spot, likely alongside Reyes.

The two infielders spent much of last season together at Class-A St. Lucie, and there they chatted about teaming up in Queens come 2005. But thanks to their play and Roberto Alomar’s exile, that wish may come true a year early.

“I thought about that a lot, me and Jose,” Garcia said in a recent interview. “Jose’s a great player, and I hope we can play together again. People call us the second baseman and shortstop of the future, and that’s what we want to be.”

As most Mets fans know, Reyes started this season in Norfolk before injuries on the big club accelerated his major-league debut.

More quietly, Garcia hit .333 with 22 RBIs in 32 games at Class-AA Binghamton before leaping to Norfolk in mid-May. There, despite a recent slump, Garcia receives rave reviews throughout the organization.

“Danny has been lights out [in our system],” Mets COO Jeff Wilpon said. “There were some things at the major-league level that allowed him to get to Triple-A quicker than even we thought. But he’s making the most of it, and that’s what you have to do.”

A similar reasoning applies to Wang, who joins new Met Jason Anderson as Staten Island’s success stories.

In two Staten Island seasons sandwiched a 2001 arm injury, Wang went 10-5 with an 2.12 ERA. The former Chinese Olympian won the clinching game in the 2002 NY-P championship series.

His performance bumped all the way to Double-A Trenton this year, where he’s 4-3 with a 4.37 ERA, including a four-hit, complete-game shutout at New Britain on May 2. His summer also included a selection to the Eastern League All-Star Game.